Geospatial access to lifelogging photos in virtual reality

Publication date

2018-06-06

Authors

Hürst, WolfgangISNI 000000035205226X
Ouwehand, Kevin
Mengerink, Marijn
Duane, Aaron
Gurrin, Cathal

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

We present a virtual reality system for accessing geotagged photos taken with a lifelogging camera. Photos are spatially located on a world map that can be explored with a head-mounted display. Using a virtual reality headset allows users to easily and intuitively explore this large information space. Images are initially represented by icons but become visible once a user gets closer to a particular area of interest. While not suitable for all search tasks, this visualisation has benefits in situations where location plays a significant role; be it because the actual content is location-related or because the owner of the lifelog remembers and associates the related event with certain places. Likewise, our spatial representation of the data often implicitly reveals a temporal relationship, which can be helpful in the search process as well.

Keywords

Geospatial photo browsing, Lifelogging, Virtual reality, Taverne, Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design, Human-Computer Interaction, Software

Citation

Hürst, W, Ouwehand, K, Mengerink, M, Duane, A & Gurrin, C 2018, Geospatial access to lifelogging photos in virtual reality. in LSC '18: Proceedings of the 2018 ACM Workshop on The Lifelog Search Challenge. Association for Computing Machinery, pp. 33-37, 1st ACM Workshop on the Lifelog Search Challenge, LSC 2018, Yokohama, Japan, 11/06/18. https://doi.org/10.1145/3210539.3210547, conference